Malta Independent

Hollywood roars back into action

- Lindsey Bahr

Summer starts early this year in Hollywood with the potentiall­y record-breaking release of

Avengers: Infinity War Thursday, and the marquee Marvel superheroe­s couldn’t be coming at a better time.

The box office for the year is down nearly three percent, and the industry is looking to redeem itself after last summer, which, despite hits like Wonder Woman, had its worst performanc­e in more than a decade. Although all studios are embracing the yearround blockbuste­r schedule and massive hits can emerge in any month, like Black Panther in February, It in September and Star

Wars in December, with work and school vacations, nothing can beat the summer’s potential.

This summer movie going season, which typically runs from the first weekend in May through Labor Day, could get things back on track. Two of the most profitable franchises have major films on the slate. The Walt Disney Company and Marvel have

Avengers: Infinity War (April 27) which some experts are predicting will score the biggest opening of all time, and Universal Pictures is releasing the sequel to the fifth highest domestic earner of all time, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, on June 22. And as with every summer, there are more than a handful of sequels and familiar brands coming to theaters, including: Deadpool 2 (May 18); Solo: A Star Wars Story (May 25); The Incredible­s 2 (June 15); Sicario: Day of the Soldado (June 29); The First Purge (July 4); Ant-Man and the Wasp (July 6); Hotel Transylvan­ia 3: Summer Vacation (July 13); The Equalizer 2 (July 20); Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again! (July 20); and

Mission: Impossible — Fallout (July 27).

But Wall Street Journal reporter

Ben Fritz whose new book The Big Picture: The Fight for the Future

of Movies, examines the current state of the industry, notes that while the big, franchise, tent-pole films are always the highestgro­ssing and that films like Jurassic World 2 and Avengers: Infinity War will be sure-fire hits, oversatura­tion is possible too.

“People do like to see the big franchise tent-pole films,” Fritz said. “But even if the studios make more of them, people are not going to more movies. The more of them there are, the more they are competing for the same box office dollars and as a result you see more flops.”

According to Box Office Mojo, in 2017, movie ticket sales were at a 25-year low, and competitio­n for audience attention is only intensifyi­ng. Netflix has a whole slate of summer films too, from an Adam Sandler and Chris Rock comedy (The Week Of, April 27) to the WWII-set adaptation of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. This year too has shown a concentrat­ion of box office dollars on just a few films — Black Panther, Fritz noted, accounted for 23 percent of the ticket sales in the first three months of the year.

And it’s at least part of the reason why many studios are touting the diversity of their slates beyond the spectacle of superheroe­s and blockbuste­rs.

“Today, it’s even more important that there is a wide variety of films out there, films that are provocativ­e, that are thrilling, that obviously are entertaini­ng and that you’re presenting them in new and exciting ways,” said Jim Orr, Universal Pictures’ president of domestic theatrical distributi­on. “We have right now a

theater-going audience who is discerning and I think we need to keep that in mind with everything we put forth.”

Universal has Jurassic World and Mamma Mia! sequels, sure, but it is also releasing Dwayne Johnson’s action-thriller Skyscraper and its indie arm Focus Features has films like the dark dramedy Tully (May 4), with Charlize Theron, Spike Lee’s

BlacKkKlan­sman (Aug. 10) and documentar­ies about Mr. Rogers (Won’t You Be My NeighboUr,

June 8) and Pope Francis (May 18).

Warner Bros., home of Wonder Woman, Batman and the other DC Comics superheroe­s, doesn’t even have a major DC film on the slate this summer (aside from the animated Teen Titans GO! To the

Movies, July 27). Instead, its slate boasts films like the star (and female)-driven Ocean’s 8, with Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Rihanna and others, comedies like Tag (June 15) and Life of the

Party (May 11), and an adaptation of the popular book Crazy

Rich Asians (Aug. 17). “The business just gets spread out over 12 months,” said Warner Bros. domestic distributi­on president Jeff Goldstein. “It’s not about one particular season and for a studio, it’s about opportunis­tically dating your movies in a way to maximize your box office on any given film.”

Beyond Ocean’s 8 there are a number of gender-flipped reboots and bawdy female-led comedies, like Overboard (May 4) with Anna Faris, the Dirty Rotten

Scoundrels remake The Hustle (June 29) with Anne Hathaway and Rebel Wilson, Book Club (May 18) with Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburge­n, and The Spy

Who Dumped Me (Aug. 3) with

Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon.

And action fans can look forward to Mark Wahlberg as an intelligen­ce officer trying to smuggle a police officer out of the country in Mile 22 (Aug. 3) and Jason Statham fighting a shark in The Meg (Aug. 10).

Audiences thirsting for more unconventi­onal fare may just have to look a little deeper for the potential hidden gems, like Uncle

Drew (June 29), a comedy about an aging basketball team competing in a street tournament, with Lil Rel Howery, Kyrie Irving and Shaquille O’Neal, and

Hereditary (June 8), a trippy horror about the strange things that start happening when a family’s matriarch dies.

Sundance breakouts coming this summer include Eighth Grade (July 13) from comedian Bo Burnham, which follows an eighth grade girl around her last week of middle school, Blindspott­ing (July 20) about a police shooting in Oakland, and Sorry to

Bother You (July 6) also Oaklandset, but with a quirkier sci-fi edge.

There’s the almost too-strangeto-be-true The Happytime Murders (Aug. 17) from Brian Henson and starring Melissa McCarthy, where puppets and humans coexist and a private eye takes on the case of a puppet on puppet murder.

And then there’s Hotel Artemis, the directoria­l debut of Iron Man

3 screenwrit­er Drew Pearce. It’s an original action-thriller about a hospital for criminals set in a dystopian, near-future Los Angeles with a star-studded cast including Jodie Foster, Sterling K. Brown and Jeff Goldblum that Global Road Entertainm­ent is releasing on June 8. Pearce said there was no way he could have gotten it made in the studio system. “Hopefully this is a rallying cry. It’s not a sequel, it’s not based on a comic. It’s not a reboot. It’s its own eccentric and hopefully loveable beast of a movie,” Pearce said.

“I think what we’ve seen in the last year is movies with real personalit­y are actually what an audience is crying out for, whether that’s tiny movies that made good like Get Out or taking the superhero blockbuste­r like Thor:

Ragnarok and essentiall­y making a quirky New Zealand comedy out of it,” he said. “I think there’s a real appetite for something that’s just a little different and a little less cookie-cutter.”

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